An Abused Boy Asked Bikers for a Dad. Their School Arrival Changed Everything-felicia

Marcus had learned early that adults could look straight at a bruise and decide it was easier to study the floor.

At Roosevelt Elementary, teachers called him quiet.

Neighbors called him polite.

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Derek Vance called him weak whenever Marcus’s mother was at her night job and the apartment got too small for Derek’s anger.

Marcus was 8 years old, which meant he still believed some things because his mother had told him they were true.

She had told him his real father had been a good man.

She had told him that grief could make people tired, but it did not have to make them cruel.

She had told him once, while they watched a line of motorcycles pass the grocery store, that bikers were loyal.

‘If a biker is your friend,’ she had said, shifting a bag of discount rice against her hip, ‘he’s your friend forever.’

Marcus had stored that sentence away like treasure.

He did not have many treasures.

His backpack had a frayed zipper, his best pencil had no eraser, and the little picture of his father that his mother kept in the hallway had been knocked crooked twice by Derek and straightened twice by Marcus when no one was watching.

His father had died when Marcus was four.

Marcus remembered almost nothing clearly except the smell of his father’s jacket, the scratch of beard against his cheek, and the way his mother cried into dishwater when she thought he was asleep.

Derek came into their lives later, first with flowers, then with promises, then with bills he expected Marcus’s mother to solve.

He worked at the auto parts store on Fifth Street, where people said he was funny when he wanted something and ugly when he owed money.

By the time Marcus was in second grade, his mother’s two jobs had become the wall between the family and whatever men Derek had disappointed that week.

She worked mornings at a diner and nights cleaning offices, and she came home smelling like bleach, fryer oil, and exhaustion.

Marcus never told her everything.

He loved her too much to add weight to hands that already shook when she counted cash at the kitchen table.

Derek was careful at first.

He shoved Marcus into doorframes and called it clumsy.

He gripped his arm too hard and called it discipline.

Then one Tuesday night, after a losing card game and three beers, Derek hit him across the face hard enough that the room tilted sideways.

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